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charlie: who knows? we were talking about this. people -- not day trading but one of these firms that trade fast and loose and fast and furious but fast and furious -- they wanted more regulation. i don't think so. those types of firms that do that, that type of trading, they want existing regulations to be enforced by market access. ashley: good point. interesting. we will find out if the sec comes up with it when they finish. the closing bell ringing in 26 minutes. coming up, john hyler has $60 billion worth of investment advice for you including y. now is the best time to be fully invested in the market. go on and jump in. that is next. you see us, at the start of the day. on the company phone list that's a few names longer. you see us bank on busier highways. on once empty fields. everyday you see all the ways all of us at us bank are helping grow our economy. lending more so companies and communities can expand, grow stronger and get back to work. everyday you see all of us serving you, around the country, around the corner. u
charlie: who knows? we were talking about this. people -- not day trading but one of these firms that trade fast and loose and fast and furious but fast and furious -- they wanted more regulation. i don't think so. those types of firms that do that, that type of trading, they want existing regulations to be enforced by market access. ashley: good point. interesting. we will find out if the sec comes up with it when they finish. the closing bell ringing in 26 minutes. coming up, john hyler has...
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charlie thanks very much. the mystery of the loose airline seats may be solved. that's coming next. >> pelley: american airlines said today it has figured out what caused seats to come loose three times on its 757s. the good news is it wasn't vandalism or sabotage. transportation correspondent mark strassmann has the latest on all this. mark? >> reporter: scott, those three incidents happened over the last week, seats tilted in midair. passengers were sitting in the seats. the flights had to turn back. american has been reconfiguring planes, moving around rows of seats to create extra leg room and charge higher prices for the comfort. the airline now blames the mishaps on human error. some rows were reanchored to the plane's floor incorrectly. today an american airlines spokesman said: american says mechanics are now evaluating all 47 of its 757s where the same clamp was used. they've evaluated 36 so far and, scott, discovered six had the clamps installed wrong. >> pelley: mystery solved, mark, thanks very much. australia's great barrier reef is a natural wonder
charlie thanks very much. the mystery of the loose airline seats may be solved. that's coming next. >> pelley: american airlines said today it has figured out what caused seats to come loose three times on its 757s. the good news is it wasn't vandalism or sabotage. transportation correspondent mark strassmann has the latest on all this. mark? >> reporter: scott, those three incidents happened over the last week, seats tilted in midair. passengers were sitting in the seats. the...
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Oct 1, 2012
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there is he. >> well, get me off, get charlie on. there we go. >> i ask a couple of people this already i think, president owe vans, that was when we saw the size and the magnitude of the latest moves, qe moves, a lot of people thought that things must be a lot worse than what we were led to believe and we thought we'd see some numbers that would make that apparent. we haven't seen numbers that are making that apparent, and i guess if you consider that it's a dual mandate, as long as we're above 8%, anything is justified. is that the thinking of the fed at this point, and i guess if inflation's low you can satisfy that mandate as well. you could even say that inflation's below our target so you're satisfying both mandates, but was that the thinking, there was really nothing worse than the rest of us thought in the economy when you decided to do this? >> well, that's a good question. i think that it's evident the data softened during the summer and this ends up being the third summer that we've seen the data soften from a first year,
there is he. >> well, get me off, get charlie on. there we go. >> i ask a couple of people this already i think, president owe vans, that was when we saw the size and the magnitude of the latest moves, qe moves, a lot of people thought that things must be a lot worse than what we were led to believe and we thought we'd see some numbers that would make that apparent. we haven't seen numbers that are making that apparent, and i guess if you consider that it's a dual mandate, as long...
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charlie: it is regulated by him also. barclays jpmorgan, citigroup, all of them are involved in this thing. it will be a big mess. grass lake comes in today is really starting to turn up the heat. tell us what you knew. tell us if you considered ramifications for not taking a stronger stand at the time. there is an impact on monistic polities. municipalities have all of these contracts or financial derivative to balance the books. they lose money, the value of those investments go down when the interest rates go down. opposite of what usually happens. grassley is telling geithner, listen, let's make our own rate up. why are we doing this, they think almost everything, libor is the most universally used rate on something that could be so manipulated. it sort of put together by this trade group. liz: what are we letting the banks be part of it anyway? charlie: he said it in his letter. why don't we do in american based interest rate. something like that. i tell you, i think it will pick up a little game now. that is somethi
charlie: it is regulated by him also. barclays jpmorgan, citigroup, all of them are involved in this thing. it will be a big mess. grass lake comes in today is really starting to turn up the heat. tell us what you knew. tell us if you considered ramifications for not taking a stronger stand at the time. there is an impact on monistic polities. municipalities have all of these contracts or financial derivative to balance the books. they lose money, the value of those investments go down when the...
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let's take a look at the cme, charlie needles, the cme. charlie, what a day? is it all on the back of the ism numbers? >> it is. you know, chi pmi came out overnight, and that showed things have stabilized there, in china. european pmi was in line, not lighting the world on fire. a little concern over the employment situation there. but if you look at the breakdown of the u.s. pmi, you kind of hit on all cylinders. the prices paid was actually a little higher, but if you're trying to reflate the market, that's a decent measure. it had been 54 last month, 58 this month. the employment sector picked up, new order sector picked up, but we did see an uptick in the employment sector. i think you hit it on the head, ashley, that's what the market's taking focus on today. aaron ash all right, let's go to ben willis at in ncse -- nyse. does this point to a much better recovery than we thought perhaps? because i think there's still a lot of mixed data out of there. >> oh, i think we're a little ahead of the game if we're looking for the recovery, but as we just heard,
let's take a look at the cme, charlie needles, the cme. charlie, what a day? is it all on the back of the ism numbers? >> it is. you know, chi pmi came out overnight, and that showed things have stabilized there, in china. european pmi was in line, not lighting the world on fire. a little concern over the employment situation there. but if you look at the breakdown of the u.s. pmi, you kind of hit on all cylinders. the prices paid was actually a little higher, but if you're trying to...
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Oct 2, 2012
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charlie d'agata in afghanistan where american troops are on the lookout for enemies among their afghan allies. >> every soldier is required to carry their weapon with them at all times. >> pelley: and an ingenious idea for helping the poor inspired by his mother. >> i'm hoping my mother is watching and that she is enjoying this. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening, election someday five weeks from today but many of the states are getting a head start. today voters in ohio-- one of the key battleground states that will tip the balance on which way this election goes-- began casting their ballots. that brings to eight the number of states where voting is already under way. 34 states in all will begin voting before november 6. the latest preelection polling in ohio-- the second-biggest battleground state-- shows president obama with a ten-point lead over mitt romney, 53% to 43%. dean reynolds is in the buckeye state tonight with the voters. dean? >> reporter: scott, back in 2008, nearly 30% of ohio's more than seven million
charlie d'agata in afghanistan where american troops are on the lookout for enemies among their afghan allies. >> every soldier is required to carry their weapon with them at all times. >> pelley: and an ingenious idea for helping the poor inspired by his mother. >> i'm hoping my mother is watching and that she is enjoying this. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening, election someday five weeks...
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Oct 6, 2012
10/12
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it looks like you've got the explain gene pretty well. >> well, thank you, charlie. (applause) >> but there is also many ways to serve and you have been asked this many times. are you hopeful about politics or are you cynical about politics? >> i am optimistic about politics. partly because i think optimism is predicated on facts and solutions and kind of doused with a lot of dreams. i'm optimistic for a couple of reasons. one, i think that as we saw today with governor romney and president obama, although sometimes this gets obscured by various intermediation, we have people running for president who care enough about platforms like this and helping to foster a partnerships like those that are constantly being created here at cgi and well beyond cgi to come here and talk to people who are interested in partnerships and collaborations, and solutions. >> thank you. >> thank you, charlie. >> good to see you. >> good to see you. >> thank you for joining us. captioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org >> funding for
it looks like you've got the explain gene pretty well. >> well, thank you, charlie. (applause) >> but there is also many ways to serve and you have been asked this many times. are you hopeful about politics or are you cynical about politics? >> i am optimistic about politics. partly because i think optimism is predicated on facts and solutions and kind of doused with a lot of dreams. i'm optimistic for a couple of reasons. one, i think that as we saw today with governor romney...
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charlie: thank you. melissa: how important is it for large companies to give back to the people they serve? lori: they transfer money all around the world. we really have a front row seat. in the meantime, here are some of today's winners and losers on the s&p 500. netflix up 8% today. back with more after this. ♪ ♪ lori: it is time for stocks now as we do every 15 minutes. but head to the floor of the new york stock exchange. nicole petallides is standing by. nicole: the number one loser on the dow jones industrial. so many folks hold hewlett-packard in their holdings and some way whether it is a mutual fund or an individual tech fund. it is getting hit hard today. talking about a very challenging environment. giving an outlook that was somewhat of a cautious one. we are think that down 8.6%. that is a huge move. almost at a ten year low. i also want to take a look and flipped the arrow around. that is for netflix. it has been a top performer for the s&p 500. number one spot right now. citigroup rei
charlie: thank you. melissa: how important is it for large companies to give back to the people they serve? lori: they transfer money all around the world. we really have a front row seat. in the meantime, here are some of today's winners and losers on the s&p 500. netflix up 8% today. back with more after this. ♪ ♪ lori: it is time for stocks now as we do every 15 minutes. but head to the floor of the new york stock exchange. nicole petallides is standing by. nicole: the number one...
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earlier some attributed part of the rally to what chicago fed bank president charlie evans told our steve liesman this morning on cnbc. listen. >> in my opinion, we'd continue with the asset purchases until we see payroll employment more like 200,000, 250,000. >> you're saying continue at 85 billion into all of 2013? that would be your recommendation? >> this is my recommendation. >> so is the fed's bond buying spree fueling the markets and should we be worried it won't last? that's what we're talking about right now. eric is with us of gerring wealth management. he says yes. gary clark says be defensive knew, expect a rally after the election. thanks for joining us. harry, why do you expect a rally after the election? we'll get nr clarity then? >> that's one thing. the uncertainty is the death of the market. i think we're going to get a correction first. the market is tired. the tired gain of last month was two days. ecb day and qe forever day. that's not good for the markets. the market needs a correction. think now anywhere from 5% to 8% will do it. a lot of money out there waiting to
earlier some attributed part of the rally to what chicago fed bank president charlie evans told our steve liesman this morning on cnbc. listen. >> in my opinion, we'd continue with the asset purchases until we see payroll employment more like 200,000, 250,000. >> you're saying continue at 85 billion into all of 2013? that would be your recommendation? >> this is my recommendation. >> so is the fed's bond buying spree fueling the markets and should we be worried it won't...
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. >> steve liesman has an interview with chicago fed president charlie evans on "squawk box." whether comments from fed officials be able to swing things around bearing in mind we've basically committed now every month to spending whatever it takes? >> no, i think they're committed. we want to hear essentially getting to congress a message that says our job is done. it's now up to you to make sure that fiscal policy sets a growth agenda that makes sense. that's what's missing in this equation. >> jack, good to see you. thanks for that. if you see any slightly bruised and feeling worse for themselves european golf fans, just point them to bed or something. we'd appreciate that. thanks for that, jack. good to see you. that's it, we'll leave and you look at u.s. futures. coming up next, "squawk box." we hope you have a profitable day. #. >>> welcome to the first day of the fourth quarter. factory data out of europe, what are calling an inevitable new recession. in the u.s., investors are preparing for friday's jobs report and barack obama and mitt romney are hunkering down for de
. >> steve liesman has an interview with chicago fed president charlie evans on "squawk box." whether comments from fed officials be able to swing things around bearing in mind we've basically committed now every month to spending whatever it takes? >> no, i think they're committed. we want to hear essentially getting to congress a message that says our job is done. it's now up to you to make sure that fiscal policy sets a growth agenda that makes sense. that's what's...
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charlie gasparino has exclusive details on this. what does this mean, charlie? do they think president obama is going to get reelected? >> yes. or likely. this isn't a new trend. i've been reporting stuff coming out of the romney campaign last couple weeks. in the last week we see this type of trend. it is not money going from republicans to, from romney to president obama. it is more or less, money that was going to, or pledged to mitt romney's presidential campaign being diverted to house and senate seats. you have key republican donors, many in the new york area, that is one of the good things about covering wall street, i know a lot of the big money twice here. that money, from what i understand is starting to be diverted to hoist and senate races. that is not good news for mitt romney. could this change? i could tell you this. i talked to people inside the romney campaign. they confirmed the trend. they confirmed the trend is beginning. they believe it is reversible. one good strong debate performance, coupled with the facts polls showing president obama ah
charlie gasparino has exclusive details on this. what does this mean, charlie? do they think president obama is going to get reelected? >> yes. or likely. this isn't a new trend. i've been reporting stuff coming out of the romney campaign last couple weeks. in the last week we see this type of trend. it is not money going from republicans to, from romney to president obama. it is more or less, money that was going to, or pledged to mitt romney's presidential campaign being diverted to...
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Sep 28, 2012
09/12
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john thain taking our own, talking to him about his plans for cit and you know, charlie. now, you're coming out here because you've opinion reporting all day about -- >> and yesterday. melissa: about john thain out there shopping cit i understand another network which shall remain nameless. >> i call them brand x. melissa: was refuting your story? >> he tried to refute it on brand x. what, listen, when john thain was actually a major player on wall street, cit is not a major player i used to take glee when he refuted my old stories because he mattered at new york stock exchange and merrill he tried to refute all sorts of stuff. they need to raise capital at merrill. he would say they don't and they would raise capital. i would say he is on the ropes with ken louis he will not replace him after the bank of america brought merrill lynch. he got replaced. as a matter of fact john thain knew he was going to be replaced he saw me, he saw me on tv announce it. has history of this. today i think he was pretty squirrely. like he said not player he once was. i want to address coup
john thain taking our own, talking to him about his plans for cit and you know, charlie. now, you're coming out here because you've opinion reporting all day about -- >> and yesterday. melissa: about john thain out there shopping cit i understand another network which shall remain nameless. >> i call them brand x. melissa: was refuting your story? >> he tried to refute it on brand x. what, listen, when john thain was actually a major player on wall street, cit is not a major...
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harper's character, was that charlie harper and alan are brothers. and so they're sort of stuck together no matter what. there was a great deal of irritation in their relationship. but alan and walden are actually friends. i have been where you are. rejected, friendless, broke. >> i'm not broke. i'm worth like $1 billion. >> beg pardon? they're a weird friendship, and that's what makes it fun to play. it is a very different vibe. >> every time i see you on tv, i always think of another actor. and i'm wondering if you are somehow related to him. >> okay. >> his name is matthew broderick. >> i have been mistaken for matthew broderick for many, many, many years. even when i was working as an usher before i got a job as an actor. people used to say, oh, you were wonderful in "torch song trilogy." that's wonderful. here's your seat. you know. i'm not matthew broderick. we do resemble each other. he's a lovely guy. he is very -- he has rarely been mistaken for me. it does go g both ways, but rarely. there's much worse people to be mistaken for. so i'll tak
harper's character, was that charlie harper and alan are brothers. and so they're sort of stuck together no matter what. there was a great deal of irritation in their relationship. but alan and walden are actually friends. i have been where you are. rejected, friendless, broke. >> i'm not broke. i'm worth like $1 billion. >> beg pardon? they're a weird friendship, and that's what makes it fun to play. it is a very different vibe. >> every time i see you on tv, i always think...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 3, 2012
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funding for charlie rose was provided by the following. >> rose: additional funding provided by these funders. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. rose. >> rose: riccardo muti is here, he is one of the world's great conductors and led some of the best orchestras, including the vienna philharmonic, he is currently music director o director of the chicago symphony orchestra, critics and audiences alike have been dazed and charmed which the intensity, the technique, the emotion that he and his musicians bring. here is a look at a performance of verdi requiem. ♪ .. ♪ ♪ >> rose: muti and the chicago symphony orchestra in new york, to open the season at carnegie hall on october 3rd, they are performing orff's carmina burana, i am happy to have mastery i are back at this table, when you are conducting what are you thinking about? what is going through your head are you hearing the music instantaneously in your head that you know the score or what? >> this is a difficult, it is difficult to answer this question. in any cas
funding for charlie rose was provided by the following. >> rose: additional funding provided by these funders. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. rose. >> rose: riccardo muti is here, he is one of the world's great conductors and led some of the best orchestras, including the vienna philharmonic, he is currently music director o director of the chicago symphony orchestra, critics and audiences alike have been dazed...
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what happens after operation twist ends and charlie evans saying that he thinks they ought to maintain it or keep adding $85 billion to the balance every month and this is not through a twist context. he doesn't want them to shell short-term and buy long-term, he wants them to bias sets of 85 billion. he is out there saying i think it should be 2013 and a solid reaction in the gold market and also i think the stock, too, scott. >> yep. no doubt about that. steve liesman, thanks so much. >> i am sorry, one thing. i just want to add we'll be monitoring, he will be taking questions and we'll be monitoring and taking some of that live even. >> we absolutely will if it falls within the con finds of our show, will you see it here. if not our friends at power lunch will bring you that chairman and answer session. steve grasso, give me the view on the floor of the exchange. mr. bernanke, mr. evans and other that is like the stimulus are your friend, right? >> you tell me where the central bank that's not printing money and i will give you a lollipop and i know that's what you're in the busines
what happens after operation twist ends and charlie evans saying that he thinks they ought to maintain it or keep adding $85 billion to the balance every month and this is not through a twist context. he doesn't want them to shell short-term and buy long-term, he wants them to bias sets of 85 billion. he is out there saying i think it should be 2013 and a solid reaction in the gold market and also i think the stock, too, scott. >> yep. no doubt about that. steve liesman, thanks so much....
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got a facebook isn't our only look far to thank you dimitri charlie peter lavelle in his gas crawl style whether we're going to see an arab winter. the. line. would be soon which brightened if you knew about sun move from phones to freshen some of. his food stocks on t.v. dot com. there are those who desperately need it to survive. misspoken is the time to give money to on lookout to follow on goldman the fish out on the suppresses the prize the rights of the two for. new clothes and. those who don't get their share of the trades. by downloading gobs forty cultivates new old dos but look the one not us that people need to know about it i mean not look at it it from the company from. those who suck it out to prosper. inside the seas instead. of you know. it's. nice licensed and. no one can live without it's in one of the largest blood banks in the world. blood of nigeria. on our t.v. . and you can. stand. alone and welcome to crossfire but i'm curious about from the arab spring to the arab winter where does this great liberation project stand in the arab middle east and where's it going a
got a facebook isn't our only look far to thank you dimitri charlie peter lavelle in his gas crawl style whether we're going to see an arab winter. the. line. would be soon which brightened if you knew about sun move from phones to freshen some of. his food stocks on t.v. dot com. there are those who desperately need it to survive. misspoken is the time to give money to on lookout to follow on goldman the fish out on the suppresses the prize the rights of the two for. new clothes and. those who...
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charlie gasparino is first to report on thain. charlie: he cannot sell it. why can't he felt it? cit is a pretty risky operation. the banks are under regulation by the fed. they cannot really fit. cit, let's go through a little history. it is very controversial. it went belly up or with heading towards belly up during the financial crisis. received a $2.3 billion bailout good then filed bankruptcy. then they screwed the taxpayers. john thain took it over after that when he left merrill lynch. he is not trying to sell it. he cannot sell it. what he did yesterday, this is a game of cat and mouse, when you tell everybody you want to sell something, they think you are desperate. he did this to a pretty compliant media outlet. specifically to a reporter. this is his go to person, essentially. he said, listen, we are not for sale, we are not that desperate. what i can tell you is this, wall street thinkers say he was shopping, is shopping, he is having a difficult time doing it for all of those reasons. cit is on a restricted list. he has some issues. we should give a little background
charlie gasparino is first to report on thain. charlie: he cannot sell it. why can't he felt it? cit is a pretty risky operation. the banks are under regulation by the fed. they cannot really fit. cit, let's go through a little history. it is very controversial. it went belly up or with heading towards belly up during the financial crisis. received a $2.3 billion bailout good then filed bankruptcy. then they screwed the taxpayers. john thain took it over after that when he left merrill lynch....
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in terms of the romney campaign, charlie only told you have to story. i can't talk to neal newhouse my partner who is in boston doing the campaign and has been living up there since december. i am doing a lot of work for the super pac so whatever we talk you can -- it will be about the red sox are the giants and that's about it. i will hold off on giving advice to the romney campaign. they have enough people giving them lots of advice. >> one reaction to your point about 2004, i thought that the obama campaign probably ought to be paying royalties to karl rove because i think they really studied that 04 race very very closely and on certain things applied it very well. for example you know, take one of your opponents most important strengths and turn it into a weakness. john kerry's war record as a weakness and mitt romney's business experience and turn it into a weakness and then you know try to appeal out the independent voters but after a certain point, don't blow your whole campaign war chest going after people who may never end up going your way an
in terms of the romney campaign, charlie only told you have to story. i can't talk to neal newhouse my partner who is in boston doing the campaign and has been living up there since december. i am doing a lot of work for the super pac so whatever we talk you can -- it will be about the red sox are the giants and that's about it. i will hold off on giving advice to the romney campaign. they have enough people giving them lots of advice. >> one reaction to your point about 2004, i thought...
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i talked to charlie evans this morning. he was one of the advocates of what we're calling the q.e. infinity program, the idea of keeping your foot on the accelerator, the central bank keeping its foot on the accelerator as long as employment remained above 7%. just a little background, the fed did not go with evans' specific proposal but did create an open-ended quantitative easing. so i asked him, how open-ended is it? what happens at the end of this year when operation twist ends? what happens to additions to the balance sheet? here's what he said. >> i frankly think it's going to take almost a year in order to see the type of improvement in labor markets that i'm expecting, just getting through the first half of next year with the headwinds that we're facing. i think that it's probably later in 2013 that we would get there. so in my opinion, we'd continue with those asset purchases until we see payroll employment more like 200,000, 250,000. >> continue at $85 billion into all of 2013? >> this is my recommendation. >> it's important to parse it just a little bit. remember that pa
i talked to charlie evans this morning. he was one of the advocates of what we're calling the q.e. infinity program, the idea of keeping your foot on the accelerator, the central bank keeping its foot on the accelerator as long as employment remained above 7%. just a little background, the fed did not go with evans' specific proposal but did create an open-ended quantitative easing. so i asked him, how open-ended is it? what happens at the end of this year when operation twist ends? what...
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captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> rose: anders fogh rasmussen is here, he is the secretary general of nato, he was the prime minister of denmark for eight years before assuming his current post in 2009. he is in new york for the u.n. general assembly, nato has significantly redefined its mission since its founding in 1949. it's primarily-- last year it enforce add no-fly zone in libya and the campaign that overthrew moammar qaddafi. i'm pleased to have the secretary general at this table, welcome. tell me how you have defined the role for nato in the current environment, especially in the middle east. >> the core role is still to protect our citizens against any threat to their security we won the cold war. we protected our citizens against soviet communism, aggression. we won the cold war. the soviet broke down but after the end of the cold war we realized that we are faced we merging security challenges, terrorism, this is the reason why we are in afghanistan. that's why we are now building a nato missile defense
captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> rose: anders fogh rasmussen is here, he is the secretary general of nato, he was the prime minister of denmark for eight years before assuming his current post in 2009. he is in new york for the u.n. general assembly, nato has significantly redefined its mission since its founding in 1949. it's primarily-- last year it enforce add no-fly zone in libya and the campaign that overthrew...
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we had an answer from charlie evans this morning. he thinks the fed should keep adding to its balance sheet. right now what it's doing with operation twist is selling short-term securities and buying long-term ones. the effect of that is neutral as to the size of the balance sheet. charlie evans says he wants to take the $40 billion they're spending on mortgages, continue that but do a total $85 billion net addition to the balance sheet. i'd like to ask fed chairman ben bernanke if that's what he expects. >> let's listen in here. obviously i was struck, steve, by how sort of full-throated -- i've used that phrase several times and i apologize for that -- but his defense was of fed policy. will that quell any of his critics? >> i don't think so. i think really people have dug in their heels on this. i think the one question and one criticism has been about inflation. to the critics, where is the inflation. >> sorry to interrupt. let's listen to some questions. >> -- the staff will be through to pick them up or you can just bring them
we had an answer from charlie evans this morning. he thinks the fed should keep adding to its balance sheet. right now what it's doing with operation twist is selling short-term securities and buying long-term ones. the effect of that is neutral as to the size of the balance sheet. charlie evans says he wants to take the $40 billion they're spending on mortgages, continue that but do a total $85 billion net addition to the balance sheet. i'd like to ask fed chairman ben bernanke if that's what...
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of what is going on here because we lost a nice lead and end in the green for the dow it appears but charlie brady, a ief economist says at&t is responsible for a big chunk of this loss. >> united healthcare. those are the names weighing on the dow jones industrials. we have seen hewlett-packard in there and microsoft and j. p. morgan and some names that played on the dow going into the close. liz: dave: there are some all-time highs. consolation brands, we will talk to the ceo coming up so some stocks had good days. >> the dow hit the highest level in five years so constellation brand you think of corona and raven line an all-time high. walmart. you need your alcohol. you need your tobacco. dave: and wholefoods. may be inconsistent to smoke a cigarette when eating whole foods that doing pretty well. zynga a big movers today. >> they cut their outlook again. you see the dramatic fall off and a lot of favorites stay below. avalanche facebook and linkedin. dave: another sort of bumper is green mountain coffee. we are used to that and it lost 5%. >> we were watching green mountain. starbucks sa
of what is going on here because we lost a nice lead and end in the green for the dow it appears but charlie brady, a ief economist says at&t is responsible for a big chunk of this loss. >> united healthcare. those are the names weighing on the dow jones industrials. we have seen hewlett-packard in there and microsoft and j. p. morgan and some names that played on the dow going into the close. liz: dave: there are some all-time highs. consolation brands, we will talk to the ceo coming...
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>>neil: charlie gasparino, thank you. >> in the meantime, for now, we are grateful that g.e. cap dallas and a.i.g. are not tanking just yet just as we are thankful the economic numbers are not soaring. the last few years that has been the drill: celebrateing today with spending numbers that remain not off the charts but they had us off the map. and a shrug to the latest g.d.p. news. it russia returning. but there is still a plus sign. steve moore has had enough. the best selling author says we should not be settling for recovery that is, a muddling. but we do, don't we? that is the dynamic. >>guest: i agree. one of the things that is disappointing about the election, i like the way that president obama ran four years ago when he ran on hope and change. now what he is running on is, this is the best we can do, america. we contrasted that, by the way, in our editorial this morning, with john f. kennedy in 1960 running against the eisenhower and nixon economy. at that time the economy was growing 2.5 to 3 percent and john f. kennedy famously said, we can do better. he minute by
>>neil: charlie gasparino, thank you. >> in the meantime, for now, we are grateful that g.e. cap dallas and a.i.g. are not tanking just yet just as we are thankful the economic numbers are not soaring. the last few years that has been the drill: celebrateing today with spending numbers that remain not off the charts but they had us off the map. and a shrug to the latest g.d.p. news. it russia returning. but there is still a plus sign. steve moore has had enough. the best selling...
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so it's not about keeping my dentures in, it's about keeping the food particles out. [ charlie ] try zinc free super poligrip. one is for a clean, wedomestic energy future that puts us in control. our abundant natural gas is already saving us money, producing cleaner electricity, putting us to work here in america and supporting wind and solar. though all energy development comes with some risk, we're committed to safely and responsibly producing natural gas. it's not a dream. america's natural gas... putting us in control of our energy future, now. wooohooo....hahaahahaha! oh...there you go. wooohooo....hahaahahaha! i'm gonna stand up to her! no you're not. i know. you know ronny folks who save hundreds of dollars switching to geico sure are happy. how happy are they jimmy? happier than a witch in a broom factory. get happy. get geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. ♪ . melissa: europe and the economic crisis you have to care about this because it could have major impact on our markets in greece and spain detruck. now the greek prime minister is warning th
so it's not about keeping my dentures in, it's about keeping the food particles out. [ charlie ] try zinc free super poligrip. one is for a clean, wedomestic energy future that puts us in control. our abundant natural gas is already saving us money, producing cleaner electricity, putting us to work here in america and supporting wind and solar. though all energy development comes with some risk, we're committed to safely and responsibly producing natural gas. it's not a dream. america's natural...
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. >>> and charlie evans will be our special guest on monday at 8:30 a.m. eastern, he was a stronged a quo cat for qe infinity and hopefully he'll talk to us about the behind-the-scenes action. how do you know which ones to follow? the equity summary score consolidates the ratings of up to 10 independent research providers into a single score that's weighted based on how accurate they've been in the past. i'm howard spielberg of fidelity investments. the equity summary score is one more innovative reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. get 200 free trades today and explore your next investing idea. >>> welcome back. >> welcome back to "squawk box." >> yep. >> i'm with you to the song. the you're welcome back to "squawk box." futures have been lower all session. didn't change much after the numbers. pmi could do something. we'll see. with the midwest hit hard by the summer drought we are keeping a close watch on crop prices. cnbc's jane wells joins us with details from the department of agriculture's crop report. you have been to fly over states. yo
. >>> and charlie evans will be our special guest on monday at 8:30 a.m. eastern, he was a stronged a quo cat for qe infinity and hopefully he'll talk to us about the behind-the-scenes action. how do you know which ones to follow? the equity summary score consolidates the ratings of up to 10 independent research providers into a single score that's weighted based on how accurate they've been in the past. i'm howard spielberg of fidelity investments. the equity summary score is one more...
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funding for charlie rose was provided by the following:
funding for charlie rose was provided by the following:
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Oct 3, 2012
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that's what charlie evans is saying, in effect, they are seeing into the future, they say, and improving the future, but before it can come to pass. d tt succeeding. >> i think 34 -- if you're going to measure a yardstick in another realm, it is 34.3, isn't it? >> no, it's 36. >> it's relativity. length contraction time -- >> that's part of the problem. that's part of the problem. >> you've heard of length contraction and time dilation, right? >> we should talk in simple terms, joe. >> not general relativity. but einstein made a fortune in physics. so you're saying that -- i mean at 8%, you're not feeling the pain of all these people that are out of work. and we've got no fiscal solutions, we've got a deadlocked congress, congress can't do anything, they're the only game in town. that's got to help. >> empathy is not the way forward. the way forward is to think through the problem. >> it is staggering that they think they need to make -- >> they have an atlas complex, which is not helping. >> they should be shrugging. >> it's hindering. >> ben bernanke sets up as the world's leading auth
that's what charlie evans is saying, in effect, they are seeing into the future, they say, and improving the future, but before it can come to pass. d tt succeeding. >> i think 34 -- if you're going to measure a yardstick in another realm, it is 34.3, isn't it? >> no, it's 36. >> it's relativity. length contraction time -- >> that's part of the problem. that's part of the problem. >> you've heard of length contraction and time dilation, right? >> we should...
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Oct 5, 2012
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i have seen charlie gibson, and -- this debate has -- once the table is kind of set by the town hall questioner, there is then time for me to say, hey, wait a second. what about x, y, z? you said this or you said that. you're sort of the -- they launch the discussion, and then the moderator furthers the discussions as you said this and now you say that. that kind of thing. we hope that kind of group effort can pin down both of these men on a variety of issues. >> and watching the last debate, candy, what do you take away with that in terms of how both of these candidates reacted to jim? is there anything that you learned from it or that you saw that you'll take into the next one? >> you know, the interesting thing to me is that everybody was talking about jim when it was over, and i paid no attention to him simply because i'm sitting there writing down where i saw holes in their arguments thinking, oh, this would be good, oh, this would be a good follow-up, oh, what happened here? that kind of thing. i wasn't as sort of tuned in. i was in the debate hall, so that's, as you know, kind
i have seen charlie gibson, and -- this debate has -- once the table is kind of set by the town hall questioner, there is then time for me to say, hey, wait a second. what about x, y, z? you said this or you said that. you're sort of the -- they launch the discussion, and then the moderator furthers the discussions as you said this and now you say that. that kind of thing. we hope that kind of group effort can pin down both of these men on a variety of issues. >> and watching the last...
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with charlie on health care. and by the way, when john and i came to the conference almost the same time, we worked on navajo issues and a boxing commission and native american issues i remember with tom daschle so this is a good panel but my main point is the states i think they are laboratories of bipartisanship that the federal government can learn from, and i don't know how you merge that together. maybe this institute can figure that out. >> secretaries ridge would you pick up on that? customers are practical, they have to do it. but you also have a national governors' association where you do seem to come together more than we see the members of congress. >> we are giving the response of devotee as an executive and they are having served 12 years in congress and have a great opportunity to serve as the governor for six years nine months and five days. [laughter] a house bill pointed out i think at the end of the day -- and i do want to applaud governor schwarzenegger i read the mission statement and the ins
with charlie on health care. and by the way, when john and i came to the conference almost the same time, we worked on navajo issues and a boxing commission and native american issues i remember with tom daschle so this is a good panel but my main point is the states i think they are laboratories of bipartisanship that the federal government can learn from, and i don't know how you merge that together. maybe this institute can figure that out. >> secretaries ridge would you pick up on...